Pointless Ephemerahttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com
Cul-de-sacs of popular culture...Mon, 10 Apr 2017 14:22:33 +0000enhourly1http://wordpress.com/https://secure.gravatar.com/blavatar/f1a4e664ac8e30f0e359e3bf4842037a?s=96&d=https%3A%2F%2Fs2.wp.com%2Fi%2Fbuttonw-com.pngPointless Ephemerahttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com
Twenty (and fifteen) years of Astro Cityhttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2015/03/08/twenty-years-of-astro-city/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2015/03/08/twenty-years-of-astro-city/#respondSun, 08 Mar 2015 22:02:04 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=700Continue reading →]]>The comic Astro City turns twenty this year. Not the best known comic in the world and not part of the “Big Two” comic universes of Marvel or DC. But it’s a comic series that means a lot to me and it played a part in getting me back into comics.

When I turned eighteen, back in 1993, I decided that I was going to give up on comics. Partly, it was a desire to seem more mature and grown up, and partly because most super hero comics by the early nineties had become parodies of themselves, featuring heroes with big guns, big shoulder pads and tiny feet. (Although, it was probably more of the former than the latter.)

Fast forward to 1997. I was still interested in comics, but I’d not bought one since 1993. I had been following comics fans’ websites on the internet and some of the more nostalgic fans had become excited about a new comic called Thunderbolts.

The central conceit of the comic was that the Avengers (before they were famous) had been sucked into another dimension where they had even tinier feet and really big shoulder pads. The Thunderbolts then arrived to to fill the Avengers’ (tiny) shoes.

Except, in a shock twist, the Thunderbolts were actually villains in disguise, seeking to exploit the public’s trust. (Spoiler – they reformed. Well, most of them did.)

I cracked. It sounded good and the shoulder pads looked pretty small. Thunderbolts issue 3 became the comic that brought me back.

But how does Astro City fit into all this?

Thunderbolts was written by one Kurt Busiek. He had an obvious fondness for the long history of the Marvel Universe and the tropes of the classic super hero comic. Thunderbolts, despite its premise, was not a Watchman-style deconstruction. If anything, it was the opposite; an affirmation that even a small-time hood in a rocket suit can be heroic.

I wanted to read more Busiek. The word on the internet was that his best work was probably in his creator owned title, Astro City.

It seems it took me a while to get to Astro City. My first issue was #16, which came out almost two years after Thunderbolts #3. (In that time, Busiek had also ended up writing Iron Man and Avengers.)

But it was worth the wait. The central premise of Astro City is how classic style super heroes would affect the people around them and the life those heroes might lead between stopping the doomsday device of the week.

The first issue also dealt with the redemption of a small-time super villain, but it was a more nuanced story than Thunderbolts; the redemption was harder and less spectacular and the tones more muted. Marlowe meets Batman.

Over fifteen years later, and I’m still reading Astro City. The comic has had its hiatuses and changes, but it still has the same creative team – Busiek writing, Alex Ross painting the covers and Brent Anderson drawing the interiors.

And the stories still resonate with me. Perhaps more than they did before.

As the comic’s twentieth anniversary looms, it’s turned to Quarrel, a Hawkeye-like hero who was a background character in the first ever issue.

Twenty years on, she’s facing up to the fact that she’s getting older and can’t do what she did when she first appeared.

I’m going to be forty this year and I also find that as time passes, you look back the decisions you’ve made, and question if you can keep on doing the things you’ve been doing for years.

I don’t know the answer to that; I don’t think anyone really does. But I am glad I started reading comics again and I’m glad for the part Astro City plays in my comic reading life.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2015/03/08/twenty-years-of-astro-city/feed/0pointlessephemeraCocktail of the Week – Americanohttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/19/cocktail-of-the-week-americano/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/19/cocktail-of-the-week-americano/#commentsSun, 19 May 2013 20:40:58 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=692Continue reading →]]>In the past couple of months I’ve finally managed to acquire something I’ve coveted for a long time – a soda siphon!

It’s an old fashioned way to make soda water – you pour tap water into the siphon, put the lid on, attach a carbon dioxide capsule and you get a pressurised bottle full of soda water, which you can then spray around like an unwieldy water pistol.

Arguably, it’s a lot easier to pop round to your local corner shop and buy a bottle of soda water, but where’s the fun in that? It may explain why they’re so hard to find, though. There are a few secondhand siphons around, but they’re not always in the best condition. (It’s particularly worrying when you pick one up and it sloshes – I’d rather not think about how long the water’s been in there.)

All I needed was a cocktail that uses soda water – I chose the Americano.

I’ve mentioned the Americano in passing once or twice before. While it’s nothing to do with coffee, the origin of its name is similar. Both were favoured by American tourists visiting Italy in the early 1900’s and the locals renamed them accordingly.

Americano

2 msrs sweet vermouth

2 msrs Campari

Splash of soda water

Pour the vermouth and Campari into a short glass with ice. Add a splash of soda water.

This is a strange one, but in a good way. It’s initially quite sweet but with an extremely bitter aftertaste. It’s not unpleasant – in fact it’s extremely refreshing and makes for a good aperitif.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/19/cocktail-of-the-week-americano/feed/1pointlessephemeraP1030545P1030544P1030543Cocktail of the Week – The Holland Househttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/12/cocktail-of-the-week-the-holland-house/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/12/cocktail-of-the-week-the-holland-house/#respondSun, 12 May 2013 19:34:44 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=688Continue reading →]]>Last week, I made a Hoffman House Cocktail. Being easily confused, I then spent most of the week referring to it as a Holland House Cocktail.

Fortunately, there is a Holland House Cocktail, so it only seemed reasonable that I had a go at making one of them too.

(Both cocktails are named after bars or hotels in late 19th century Manhattan. Personally, if I was running a bar, I’d try to make sure my name was radically different from any rivals, but there you go…)

There are actually a number of different Holland House cocktail recipes, one of which uses genever, a Dutch gin (the ‘Holland’ in ‘Holland House’, presumably).

Instead of that, I’m using the version in Harry Craddock’s Savoy Cocktail Book of 1930. It’s very similar to the Aviation, but with pineapple taking the place of creme de violet.

I’m generally sceptical about pineapple in cocktails – it reminds me of the excesses of the 80’s when cocktails were all lurid colours and paper umbrellas. But it never hurts to try anything once…

Holland House (Craddock Version)

2 msr dry gin

3/4 msr dry vermouth

1/2 msr lemon juice

4 dashes maraschino

4 wedges pineapple

Muddle (mash) the pineapple pieces in the bottom of the cocktail shaker. You can buy cocktail muddlers to do this, but a wooden spoon will do. (Best not to try in a glass cocktail shaker though.)

Add the other ingredients to the shaker with ice, shake and strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish with lemon twist.

The pineapple really works in this – it gives sweetness with a little sting, while there’s bitterness from the maraschino and sourness from the lemon. It’s a well-balanced and tasty cocktail.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/12/cocktail-of-the-week-the-holland-house/feed/0pointlessephemeraP1030540Cocktail of the Week – The Hoffman Househttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/05/cocktail-of-the-week-the-hoffman-house/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/05/05/cocktail-of-the-week-the-hoffman-house/#commentsSun, 05 May 2013 17:39:11 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=682Continue reading →]]>Elinor and I have, over the years, amassed a fair number of recipe books.

Or more accurately, Elinor has amassed a fair number of recipe books, while I have two; “The 1000 Recipe Cookbook” from my student days and the uncompromisingly named “Eat Like a Man“.

The latter is produced by the food editors of Esquire Magazine, and as the decidedly pink steak on the cover indicates, its title gives a fair idea of the sort of recipes contained within.

Not that is a bad thing. The recipes are by America’s top chefs, there are lots of useful tips throughout and the recipes we’ve tried have been pretty successful.

And, best of all, it has cocktail recipes.

Not a lot of cocktail recipes, but it has the five essential cocktails.

I’ve been collecting cocktail books for a few years now, but this is on a different level – it contains 3,000 cocktail recipes, all illustrated in colour. It also explains what all of those esoteric cocktail tools are used for and what the difference between shaking or stirring is anyway.

I’ve poring (and pouring) my way through the recipes since Christmas and one I’ve tried recently is the Nick and Nora.

On the face of it, it’s another gin martini, albeit stirred, rather than shaken (which does give me a chance to use my new cocktail stirrer).

But what got piqued my interest is that it’s named after Nick and Nora Charles, the protagonists of one my favourite film series, the Thin Man.

Nick and Nora were a husband and wife detective duo created by Dashiell Hammett. They appeared in six films in the 1930’s and 40’s.

The secret of their success was their portrayal by William Powell and Myrna Loy – they were witty, clever and had an impressive on-screen chemistry that made solving the murder seem more of a nuisance than anything else. (In the first film, Nick spends the second act avoiding people who want him to solve the case.)

And they drank martinis. Lots and lots of martinis. So it seems only right that there’s one named after them.

Nick and Nora

2 1/4 msr gin

3/4 msr dry vermouth

Add ingredients to a cocktail shaker, then add ice.

Stir, using a cocktail spoon.

Strain into a cocktail glass and garnish with an olive (or two)

It’s a really good martini – dry, but enough of the vermouth to make it interesting.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2013/04/28/cocktail-of-the-week-nick-nora/feed/0pointlessephemeracocktails 005cocktails 003cocktails 004Cocktail of the Week – The Vanderbilthttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cocktail-of-the-week-the-vanderbilt/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cocktail-of-the-week-the-vanderbilt/#commentsSun, 18 Nov 2012 20:40:45 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=671Continue reading →]]>As I’ve probably said before, the Golden Age of Cocktails was probably the 1920’s and 30’s, when exotic recipes were devised to hide the taste of the bathtub hooch that passed for spirits in Prohibition America.

But the cocktail dates to before then, and it’s fun to try some whose Belle Epoque origins are suggested by their names.

One of the these is the Vanderbilt.

The Vanderbilts were one of the richest families in America at the turn of the twentieth century, their fortune built on the steamship and railroad empire of their patriarch, the impressively monikered Cornelius Vanderbilt (commonly known as The Commodore).

The Commodore’s fortune at his death was the equivalent of $143 billion today. The Vanderbilt cocktail, invented for one of his descendents in 1912, is also very rich.

The Vanderbilt

1 1/2 msr cognac

1 msr cherry brandy

1/2 msr sugar syrup

2 dashes angostura bitters

Add ingredients to a cocktail shaker filled with ice, shake, strain into a cocktail glass and garnish with a lemon twist and two maraschino cherries.

As I said, this is very rich – it’s full bodied, quite sweet (but not sickly) and feels really rather indulgent.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cocktail-of-the-week-the-vanderbilt/feed/1pointlessephemeraVanderbiltsCocktail of the Week – Vodka Martinihttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/cocktail-of-the-week-vodka-martini/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/cocktail-of-the-week-vodka-martini/#commentsSun, 11 Nov 2012 21:18:14 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=667Continue reading →]]>The vodka martini. Arguably the best known of all cocktails, mostly due to a certain cinematic superspy who’s been around for 50 years.

But in the year and a half that I’ve been blogging on cocktails, I’ve never featured the vodka martini. (I refuse to call it “a vodkatini”.)

Partly it’s because the vodka martini is a cliché among cocktails – ordering it is almost guaranteed to result in at least one James Bond reference.

But the other reason is that I’ve never thought of myself as a vodka fan. I suspect that the world of clear spirit drinkers divides into gin drinkers and vodka drinkers, and I’m firmly in the gin camp; I prefer the subtle botanics over the clean flavour of vodka.

But while I was on holiday in Paris, Elinor and I went to a restaurant that gloried in the wonderful name of Les Zazzous (“The Hepcats” in French.)

On the cocktail menu was a vodka martini – but no gin martini. Throwing caution to the wind (I was on holiday, after all) I ordered a vodka martini.

It arrived, and after the inevitable “shaken, not stirred” joke, I gave it a try.

It was really good. So good, I would say it was better than a gin martini.

The cold, clean vodka is offset by the herbal taste of the vermouth. It’s complex, yet somehow very pleasing.

When I got home, I made my own, and I’m pleased to report that the homemade version is just as good.

Vodka Martini

2 msrs vodka

1 msr dry vermouth

Add ingredients to a cocktail shaker half filled with ice. Shake until very cold. (Yes it’s a cliché, but it’s a cliché that works.) Pour into a cocktail glass and garnish with a lemon twist.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/cocktail-of-the-week-vodka-martini/feed/1pointlessephemeraLes ZazzousVodka MartiniCocktail of the Week – The Algonquinhttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/09/09/cocktail-of-the-week-the-algonquin/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/09/09/cocktail-of-the-week-the-algonquin/#respondSun, 09 Sep 2012 20:10:59 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=662Continue reading →]]>This week I made an exception to my normal rule of not drinking anything I can’t pronounce by making an Algonquin.

It all came about because I’d bought some pineapple juice to make a Singapore Sling, only to find that I didn’t have some of the other ingredients (something I’ve now remedied).

There then followed a search of cocktail recipes to find something that used both pineapple juice and any of the wide selection of spirits that reside in my cocktail cupboard.

The Algonquin is the result. It’s named after the New York hotel where it was invented, which in turn was named after the Native American people who were the original inhabitants of Manhattan. The Algonquin Hotel has a long literary tradition – Dorothy Parker held court there and it was where the New Yorker magazine was founded.

The drink itself is best described as an American Martini, with rye whiskey taking the place of the gin or vodka and pineapple juice being added.

The Algonquin

2 msrs rye whiskey (or bourbon)

1 msr dry vermouth

1 msr pineapple juice

1 dash orange bitters

Shake all of the ingredients with ice and pour into a rocks glass half filled with ice. Garnish with a cherry.

This is very nice – there’s sweetness from the juice, but it’s not at all sickly due to the vermouth and the bitters.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/09/09/cocktail-of-the-week-the-algonquin/feed/0pointlessephemeraAlgonquinCocktail of the Week – Mai Taihttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/08/19/cocktail-of-the-week-mai-tai/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/08/19/cocktail-of-the-week-mai-tai/#commentsSun, 19 Aug 2012 20:55:49 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=657Continue reading →]]>Elinor and I are big fans of Food Network UK, which started on UK digital TV last year.

All of their programmes cover food (unsurprisingly) and the vast majority of them are made by the original, US-based Food Network.

Watching American cookery programmes can lead to some degree of confusion. For a country that has the same language as the UK (more or less) the American names for foodstuffs can be surprisingly different.

What for instance is cilantro? Or arugula? (Coriander and rocket, apparently.) And why is “herbs” pronounced “erbs”?

Nonetheless, we still enjoy watching the programmes. And even better, some of them feature cocktails!

And this is one of them I saw it being made this week by Ina Garten, who’s effectively the American Delia Smith (although I don’t believe she’s a Norwich City fan).

It’s a version of the Mai Tai, which seems appropriate as summer has finally arrived in the UK.

The Mai Tai was created during the Second World War and was part of the tiki culture that emerged in mid-twentieth century America. Who created it is the source of some dispute – some people say it was Trader Vic, while others support Don the Beachcomber. (No, I am not making this up.)

Mai Tai is means “good” in Tahitian and was apparently shouted by the first Tahitian who drank one. There’s lots of different variants; Vic and Don both had different recipes and I don’t think I saw the same Mai Tai recipe in any of my cocktail books.

Mai Tai

2 msrs Bacardi

1 msr Cointreau

1 msr orange juice

1 msr lime juice

Add all ingredients to a cocktail shaker with lots of ice, shake and pour into highball glasses half filled with ice. Garnish with orange and cherry. (And any other fruit that strikes your fancy. Tiki is not known for understatement.)

This has a lot of rum in it and is pretty powerful. It’s also very citrusy – refreshing, but with a definite bite.

]]>https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/08/19/cocktail-of-the-week-mai-tai/feed/3pointlessephemeraMai TaiFarewell to the Dandyhttps://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/08/19/farewell-to-the-dandy/
https://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/2012/08/19/farewell-to-the-dandy/#commentsSun, 19 Aug 2012 19:59:00 +0000http://pointlessephemera.wordpress.com/?p=653Continue reading →]]>It was announced this week that Britain’s longest running comic, the Dandy, will cease publication in December with a special 75th anniversary edition. Weekly readership has dropped to less than 8,000, resulting in cancellation of the printed version. (Hopefully the new electronic edition can get more readers.)

Considering the average life of British comic titles, even in their heyday of the 1970’s, was probably only a few years, people can say that it’s had a good run. But it’s still tremendously sad that something that had formed part of the fabric of British culture has passed on. (There’s even a statue of Desperate Dan in the publisher’s home town of Dundee).

However, and contrary to the impression given by some news reports, it’s not the death of British comics just yet.

But there’s not many left either.

The Beano, the Dandy’s long time stablemate, is still in rude health, with weekly sales of 38,000. But of the other comics of my childhood, only 2000AD and Commando remain.

While it’s not my place to tell the children of Britain what to read (I’ve not picked up a copy of the Dandy in almost 25 years), I do find the general British view of comics somewhat striking.

Compared with America, Europe and Japan, we generally seem to view comics as a disposable, childish medium. Kid’s stuff. And now we seem to be not even be willing to give some comics to our kids.